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Alkaline cooking and stable isotope tissue-diet spacing in swine: archaeological implications
Authors:Christina Warinner  Noreen Tuross
Institution:Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, Peabody Museum, 11 Divinity Avenue, 02138 Cambridge, MA, United States
Abstract:In this study we examine the effects of alkaline cooking on carbon and oxygen stable isotopic ratios of mineralized tissues from nine pigs raised on monotonous mixed C3/C4 vegetarian diets. Two sources of collagen (humerus and mandible) and two sources of apatite (humerus and enamel) were analyzed. Within each diet group, humerus and mandible collagens were found to record equivalent δ13C and δ18O ratios; however, enamel apatite was found to be enriched over bone apatite by 2.3‰ in carbon and 1.7‰ in oxygen. Alkaline cooking was found to slightly, but significantly increase the Δ13Ccollagen-diet and Δ18Ocollagen-diet of bone collagen. A similar trend towards enrichment was observed in bone and enamel Δ13Capatite-diet and Δ18O apatite-diet, but the differences were not significant. Observed isotopic shifts were consistent with increased nutrient utilization of the alkaline-cooked maize as compared to raw maize. In addition, a reexamination of the relationship between diet and tissue carbon isotopic values suggests that species and alimentary type should be considered when interpreting ancient diets.
Keywords:Maize  Nixtamalization  Stable isotopes  Paleodiet  Collagen  Apatite  Diet reconstruction  Carbon  Oxygen  Pig  Sus domesticus  Cooking  Enamel  Bone
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